Publication | Open Access
Emerging Powers and Emerging Trends in Global Governance
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2017
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Public PolicyGovernance FrameworkInternational RelationsGovernance (Urban Studies)International Relation TheoryGlobalizationGlobal PoliticsInternational OrganizationInternational PoliticsLiberal OptimismNew PowersWorld PoliticsPolitical ScienceSocial SciencesGeopoliticsGlobal GovernanceInternational Institutions
In the 1990s, liberal optimism permeated the study and practice of international politics. International institutions were strengthened and the discourse and practice of global governance consolidated as a new approach to world affairs. Today, new powers are emerging in this institutionalized order. New powers have changed the power relations that underpinned global governance and are also economically, politically, and culturally different from established powers. Against this backdrop, this article investigates the impacts emerging powers are having on global governance. It presents six major trends and outlines their implications for the new global governance currently taking shape. Because new powers are emerging in an already institutionalized order, the emerging global governance order is gradually growing out of the existing one. Emerging powers are rendering parts of global governance dysfunctional, layering onto it, complicating it, but not overthrowing it.